LifeHubber Labs

LifeHubber Earth

Source-led Earth signals, sky records, and visual guides for curious people.

Start with recent reports, then explore aurora glow, meteor fireballs, natural events, and public satellite imagery.

Open dashboard map Browse signals For alerts, instructions, or local impact information, use official local authorities.

Public Earth map

Public Earth signals map

A quick source-reading map for reports and forecast layers.

For the earthquake layer, dot color shows the reported magnitude range. Pulsing dots mark M4.5+ reports.

Nearby earthquake reports may be grouped on the preview map. Open the full tracker to inspect individual reports.

Blue: under M2.5 Green: M2.5+ Orange: M4.5+ Red: M6.0+

Approximate visual preview from public source reports. Select a dot for details. Use the full earthquake tracker if you want filters.

Choose the public source layers you want to compare.

Layer Active layer Loading

Checking registered public data layers.

Items Source-reported items Loading

Checking public source data.

Detail Layer highlight Loading

A source-reported value when data loads.

Source Data source USGS

Public source attribution.

Start here

Explore Earth

Earth keeps earthquakes as the default tracker, then adds approved source layers for natural events, aurora, meteor fireballs, HantaData public signals, and satellite imagery. Each one has its own source, meaning, and limits.

Map and guide

Recent Earthquakes

Use the earthquake tracker, regional views, and beginner guides to read recent USGS reports while keeping safety decisions with official sources.

Curious guides

Simple Earth Explainers

Short guides help curious readers understand the pattern behind the dots, glows, and source labels.

Visual companion

Public Satellite Imagery

A standalone NASA GIBS imagery page lets you look at broad snow-cover patterns from public satellite tiles, without mixing it into event reports.

Regional guides

Explore earthquake regions

Earthquake regions are the first focused guide set on LifeHubber Earth, built around recent USGS reports and simple reading context. For a plain guide to why many regions cluster around plate boundaries, read the Ring of Fire explainer.

Region

Indonesia

Indonesia spans many islands and nearby seas where earthquake reports can cluster. This page helps you read recent USGS reports and understand...

Open region guide

Region

Japan

Japan has detailed local monitoring and regular earthquake reports around nearby land and offshore areas. This page keeps the USGS view simple and...

Open region guide

Region

Philippines

The Philippines view may include island-area and nearby offshore reports. This page keeps recent USGS earthquake reports clear and readable.

Open region guide

Region

Taiwan

Taiwan reports can be easier to read when depth and distance are kept in view. This page presents recent USGS reports in a compact regional frame.

Open region guide

Region

New Zealand

New Zealand has local monitoring and a wide nearby offshore area. This page keeps recent USGS reports focused on magnitude, depth, and location.

Open region guide

Region

California

Recent USGS earthquake reports around California, shown as a simple public-data map and readable list. This page is for general awareness, not...

Open region guide

Region

Chile

Chile spans a long coastline, so nearby offshore reports can cover a broad north-south frame. This page keeps recent USGS reports easy to scan.

Open region guide

Region

Mexico

Mexico reports may appear along the Pacific coast, inland areas, and nearby seas. This page helps you read recent USGS reports in a focused...

Open region guide

Region

Alaska

Alaska reports can cover mainland and nearby offshore areas. This page keeps the view simple with a practical Alaska-focused map frame.

Open region guide

Region

Turkey

Turkey reports may include nearby areas around several regional fault zones and seas. This page keeps recent USGS reports careful and easy to read.

Open region guide

Layer reports

Source-reported items

A short readable list from enabled public data layers. Each entry keeps its source and meaning separate.

Loading recent public source reports.

Full tracker

Want the full tracker?

Open earthquake tracker